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Introduction to QED

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Title: Introduction to QED


1
Introduction toQED
  • Quantum Electrodynamics

2
Introduction
  • Created in 1929 by a number of scientists to
    describe the interaction of light and matter
  • Melding of Maxwells theory and quantum mechanics
  • Attempts to describe behavior of electrons
  • Paul Dirac made relativistic adjustments
  • 1948 Richard Feynman, Julian Schwinger and
    Sin-Itiro Tomonaga calculated the correction due
    to light

3
Significance
  • Describes all phenomenon but gravity and
    radioactivity
  • QED is the theory behind chemistry and governs
    properties of chemicals
  • Has survived over 50 years of testing

4
Basics
  • Describes what happens, not why
  • Light behaves like particles, not waves
  • Only probability can be calculated
  • Little arrows (probability amplitudes)

5
General Principle of Quantum Theory
  • The probability that a particular event occurs
    is the square of a final arrow (probability
    amplitude) that is found by drawing an arrow for
    each way the event could happen, and then
    combining (adding) the arrows

6
Glass Thickness
7
Arrow Lengths
8
Adding Arrows
9
Determining Direction
10
Partial Reflection
11
As the glass gets thicker
12
Extremes
13
For varying frequencies
14
Light Propagation
  • A photon has nearly equal chances of going on any
    path.
  • Therefore, all the arrows are nearly the same
    length.
  • This difference is negligible.

15
Mirrors and Angle of Incidence
16
Equal Chances
17
Arrows have equal lengths, but different
directions.
18
The middle contributes more.
19
  • Where the time is least is also where the
    time for the nearby paths is nearly the same
    thats where the little arrows point in nearly
    the same direction and add up to a substantial
    length thats where the probability of a photon
    reflecting off a mirror is determined. And thats
    why, in approximation, we can get away with the
    crude picture of the world that says light only
    goes where the time is least.
  • -Richard Feynman.
  • Time is least where the angle of incidence
    equals the angle of reflection.

20
The Edges of the Mirror
21
Cutting out Pieces
22
Diffraction Grating
23
Light through Multiple Media
24
The Lifeguard
25
Mirage
26
Light travels in straight lines?
27
Light does not move in a straight path, but
rather uses a core of nearby space. (neighboring
paths)
28
Restricting the Paths(Single Slit Diffraction)
29
Uncertainty Principle?
  • If the paths are too restricted, the light
    spreads out.
  • There is no need for the uncertainty principle.

30
Light traveling through many paths.
31
The Focusing Lens
32
  • Diagrams
  • Feynman, Richard P. QED The Strange Theory of
    Light and Matter. Princeton University Press.
    Princeton, NJ, 1988.

33
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